Siege of La Rochelle

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Siege of La Rochelle, (1627–28). The Siege of La Rochelle effectively ended the final Huguenot (French Protestant) rebellion against the French crown and was a marker in the rise of the French absolute monarchy. Cardinal Richelieu’s royal forces captured the city after a fourteen-month siege in which they also saw off three fleets from England.

Eight years after Ivry, Henry IV of France enacted the Edict of Nantes, which guaranteed Huguenots freedom of worship. After Henry’s assassination in 1610, his son Louis XIII ascended, and crown policy became more pro-Catholic. This led to Huguenot risings in the 1620s.

In June 1627, Charles I of England sent the Duke of Buckingham to promote revolt in La Rochelle, the most important Huguenot stronghold. On 20 July, leading a hundred ships and 7,000 men, Buckingham landed at Ré, an island at the mouth of the inlet leading to La Rochelle. He was unable to wrest control of Ré from the royal garrison there and was forced to retreat on 17 November.

Elsewhere, a French royal army had begun to construct fortifications close to La Rochelle. When they were fired on from the city in September, La Rochelle was formally at war with the crown. Richelieu, Louis’s chief minister, oversaw the construction of 9 miles (14.5 km) of entrenchments studded with forts and redoubts, which completely cut off La Rochelle from land. To prevent the English relieving the city from sea, Richelieu constructed a huge seawall that blockaded the channel leading to La Rochelle. Two English fleets tried, and failed, to bypass the blockade. La Rochelle held out despite famine and disease but finally surrendered on 28 October. Revolt continued until 1629, but the loss of La Rochelle was the death knell of Huguenot resistance.